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Best custom polo shirts companies in 2026 (compared)

The best custom polo shirts companies in 2026, compared. MOQ, decoration, turnaround and where each one fits, plus why embroidery beats flex printing on piqué and how Sunday designs branded polos with live pricing in 30 seconds.

Niels VandecasteeleNiels Vandecasteele
9 min read
Best custom polo shirts companies in 2026 (compared)

The best custom polo shirts companies in 2026 fall into three groups. Print-on-demand platforms like Printful suit one-off and creator merch. US promo printers like Custom Ink, RushOrderTees and VistaPrint suit small to mid bulk orders with screen print or basic embroidery. For a professional corporate polo, especially in Europe, you want a partner that embroiders rather than flex-prints on piqué, offers men's and women's fits, and can design on-brand fast. Sunday does that with ready-to-wear polos from around 10 pieces, fully custom from around 150, EU production, and live designs with pricing in about 30 seconds.

A polo is not a printed tee, so the company you choose matters more than people think. Decoration on piqué behaves differently, fit needs men's and women's cuts, and a corporate rollout needs sizing and reorders handled. We weighed each vendor on that brief, not just on cheapest-per-unit. Browse the full catalog to see where Sunday fits.

How we compared them

Per-unit price is the easiest thing to compare and the least useful. A cheap polo that loses its shape and carries a plastic flex transfer costs you more in how the team looks. So we judged each company on the criteria that decide whether a corporate polo lands.

  • Decoration on piqué. Does the company default to embroidery or a sewn detail, or push flex and DTG that look cheap on textured fabric?
  • Minimum order. What is the realistic floor for a small team or a booth, and where does fully custom begin?
  • Fit. Are there distinct men's and women's fits, or one unisex cut?
  • Turnaround. Standard lead time and whether rush exists.
  • EU production and B2B workflow. Local making, plus sizing, kitting and reorders for a whole org, not just a single drop.
  • Speed to a real design. How long from idea to an on-brand mock-up with pricing.

The companies at a glance

A quick scan first, then the detail on each. Figures are typical 2026 ranges and should be confirmed on each company's site before you order.

CompanyBest forMOQ (polos)Decoration focusEU made
SundayBranded corporate polos and team kits~10 ready-to-wear, ~150 customEmbroidery, woven patch, sewn labelYes
Custom InkSmall US bulk orders, easy online tool~6-12Screen print, embroideryNo
RushOrderTeesFast US turnaround~6Print, embroideryNo
VistaPrintNo-minimum and very small runs1Embroidery, printPartial
PrintfulPrint-on-demand and creator merch1Embroidery, DTGPartial (EU fulfilment)
4imprintPromo catalogue buying~6-12Embroidery, printNo
Lands' End BusinessClassic corporate uniform basicsVariesEmbroideryNo

A range of custom polo shirts in different colours, showing the colour flexibility a good polo supplier should offer

The right company gives you colour range and fit options, not just a cheap unit price. Polos are unusually flexible on colour.

1. Sunday

Sunday is merch infrastructure, not a print shop. Open a polo product page and the platform uses your existing brand data to generate on-brand designs with live pricing in about 30 seconds, then handles production, sizing, kitting and reorders across borders. For a corporate polo that means the right decoration by default: direct embroidery, an embroidered or woven patch, or a sewn woven label, never a plastic flex transfer on piqué.

Pros: Embroidery and sewn details by default, the correct finish for piqué; ready-to-wear from ~10, fully custom from ~150 with Pantone colours and panels; distinct men's and women's fits; EU production plus sizing, kitting and reorders handled on one platform; on-brand design with live pricing in ~30 seconds.

Cons: Built for company branding, not consumer one-off novelty merch; fully custom needs ~150 pieces and lead time to make sense.

Why it wins for polos. It treats the polo as a serious garment. The default decoration suits the fabric, the fits cover a whole team, and the whole job runs on one platform from design to distribution. See how it works, browse custom polos, or preview a mark in the free polo mockup generator.

2. Custom Ink

A well-known US name with an easy online design tool and reliable service for small group orders. Standard turnaround is around two weeks, with a rush option down to roughly three business days. Good for a US team that wants a simple, guided order and is comfortable with screen print as the default.

Pros: Friendly, guided online design tool; reliable for small to mid US group orders; rush option for tight deadlines.

Cons: US-centric, no EU production; screen-print default is weaker on textured piqué; less suited to ongoing team sizing and reorders.

3. RushOrderTees

Positioned around speed, with embroidered polos available from a low minimum (around six pieces) and rush options when a date cannot move. If your only constraint is a fast US delivery on a small quantity, it does that job. Less of a fit for a considered, repeatable corporate programme.

Pros: Fast turnaround focus, genuine rush options; low embroidery minimum, around six pieces.

Cons: US-focused logistics; speed-first rather than premium-finish-first; no team kitting or reorder workflow.

4. VistaPrint

VistaPrint sells embroidered and printed polos with effectively no minimum and bulk discounts that kick in at higher quantities. Useful for a handful of pieces or a quick test, and it has published useful branded-apparel research. For a coordinated team look across many sizes it is more of a self-serve storefront than a programme partner.

Pros: No real minimum, good for one or a few pieces; bulk discounts at higher volumes; broad self-serve product range.

Cons: Generalist, not polo-specialist; fit and finish vary by product line; limited hand-holding for a full org rollout.

A polo with a clean embroidered chest mark, the finish a corporate polo supplier should default to on piqué

Embroidery is the finish that separates a corporate polo supplier from a generic printer. On piqué it reads as quality and survives years of washing.

5. Printful

Printful is a print-on-demand and fulfilment platform with a one-piece minimum, fast production windows and EU fulfilment options. It shines for selling your own merch or producing one-offs without holding stock. For a branded team polo it leans toward embroidery and DTG on stock blanks rather than a tailored corporate garment.

Pros: One-piece minimum, no stock to hold; EU fulfilment options and integrations; good for creator and ecommerce merch.

Cons: Stock-blank focus, less corporate tailoring; not built around team sizing and rollouts; per-unit economics favour drop-ship, not bulk kits.

6. 4imprint

A large promotional-products catalogue covering polos alongside thousands of other branded items. Handy when you want one supplier for a grab-bag of giveaway gear. As a polo specialist it is shallow: you are choosing from stock promo styles rather than building a considered corporate garment.

Pros: Huge promo catalogue, one-stop convenience; embroidery and print both available.

Cons: Promo-grade rather than premium polos; US-centric, generalist service; thin on fit and corporate styling guidance.

7. Lands' End Business

Lands' End Business outfits uniform programmes with classic, durable basics and solid embroidery. A safe choice for a traditional, conservative corporate look in the US market. Less suited to a fast, fully custom, on-brand design or a European rollout.

Pros: Classic, durable corporate basics; strong embroidery on uniform programmes.

Cons: Conservative styling, limited custom freedom; US market focus; slower path to a bespoke on-brand design.

A clean branded contrast polo as a sample of the corporate-polo quality to compare suppliers against

When you compare suppliers, ask for a sample. Collar structure, fabric weight and the decoration finish tell you everything the price-per-unit hides.

How to pick for your team

Match the company to the job. The shortcut:

  • One-off or creator merch: a print-on-demand platform like Printful.
  • A small US group order, fast: Custom Ink or RushOrderTees.
  • A handful of pieces with no minimum: VistaPrint.
  • A branded corporate polo or a whole team kit, made in Europe, embroidered properly, sized for men and women, and reorderable: Sunday.

If the polo represents your brand on a booth, a retail floor or a customer visit, treat it as a garment, not a giveaway. That is the whole argument of our complete polo guide, and it is why decoration and fit beat unit price every time.

Frequently asked questions

Who are the best custom polo shirts companies in 2026?

For a professional corporate polo, the strongest options are companies that embroider properly on piqué, offer men's and women's fits and can run a team programme. Sunday leads on that brief with EU production and live design. Custom Ink, RushOrderTees and VistaPrint suit small US bulk and no-minimum orders, Printful suits print-on-demand and creator merch, and 4imprint and Lands' End Business cover promo catalogues and classic uniform basics.

What is the minimum order for custom polo shirts?

It varies widely. Print-on-demand platforms like Printful and storefronts like VistaPrint start at one piece. Promo printers like RushOrderTees and Custom Ink sit around six to twelve. Sunday offers ready-to-wear polos from around 10 pieces and fully custom polos from around 150, where Pantone colours, custom panels and sewn construction become possible.

Should a custom polo be embroidered or printed?

Embroidered, in almost every case. Piqué has a visible texture, so screen printing is less crisp than on a tee and flex printing looks like a plastic slab on the fabric. The best companies default to direct embroidery, an embroidered or woven patch, or a sewn woven label. If a supplier pushes flex transfers on a polo, treat it as a warning sign.

Which custom polo company is best for a European team?

Most of the well-known names are US-centric, which means longer shipping, customs and no local production. Sunday makes polos in Europe and handles sizing, kitting and reorders across borders on one platform, which is why it fits an EU or cross-border team better than a US promo printer.

How fast can I get custom polos?

Promo printers offer rush options down to roughly three to four business days on small US orders. Print-on-demand production runs around two to seven days before shipping. On Sunday you see an on-brand design with live pricing in about 30 seconds, then move straight onto a clear design-to-production path, including a ready-to-wear route for a smaller order that needs to land next month.

What should I compare when choosing a polo supplier?

Look past per-unit price. Compare the default decoration method on piqué, the minimum order, whether there are men's and women's fits, standard and rush turnaround, EU versus US production, and whether the company handles team sizing and reorders. A cheap polo with a plastic transfer and one unisex cut costs you more in how the team looks.

Is Sunday a good fit for one-off or novelty polos?

No, and that is by design. Sunday is built for companies branding their own polos for sales teams, trade shows, field and service teams, retail and gifting. For a single novelty piece or consumer merch, a print-on-demand platform is a better match. For a coordinated, on-brand team polo made in Europe, Sunday is the stronger choice.

Keep reading: custom polo shirts

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Frequently asked questions

Who are the best custom polo shirts companies in 2026?
For a professional corporate polo, the strongest options are companies that embroider properly on piqué, offer men's and women's fits and can run a team programme. Sunday leads on that brief with EU production and live design. Custom Ink, RushOrderTees and VistaPrint suit small US bulk and no-minimum orders, Printful suits print-on-demand and creator merch, and 4imprint and Lands' End Business cover promo catalogues and classic uniform basics.
What is the minimum order for custom polo shirts?
It varies widely. Print-on-demand platforms like Printful and storefronts like VistaPrint start at one piece. Promo printers like RushOrderTees and Custom Ink sit around six to twelve. Sunday offers ready-to-wear polos from around 10 pieces and fully custom polos from around 150, where Pantone colours, custom panels and sewn construction become possible.
Should a custom polo be embroidered or printed?
Embroidered, in almost every case. Piqué has a visible texture, so screen printing is less crisp than on a tee and flex printing looks like a plastic slab on the fabric. The best companies default to direct embroidery, an embroidered or woven patch, or a sewn woven label.
Which custom polo company is best for a European team?
Most of the well-known names are US-centric, which means longer shipping, customs and no local production. Sunday makes polos in Europe and handles sizing, kitting and reorders across borders on one platform, which is why it fits an EU or cross-border team better than a US promo printer.
How fast can I get custom polos?
Promo printers offer rush options down to roughly three to four business days on small US orders. Print-on-demand production runs around two to seven days before shipping. On Sunday you see an on-brand design with live pricing in about 30 seconds, then move straight onto a clear design-to-production path.
What should I compare when choosing a polo supplier?
Look past per-unit price. Compare the default decoration method on piqué, the minimum order, whether there are men's and women's fits, standard and rush turnaround, EU versus US production, and whether the company handles team sizing and reorders.
Is Sunday a good fit for one-off or novelty polos?
No, and that is by design. Sunday is built for companies branding their own polos for sales teams, trade shows, field and service teams, retail and gifting. For a single novelty piece or consumer merch, a print-on-demand platform is a better match.

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